None of this, all the tears and condolences, the vows to avenge the attack — matters a hill of beans. The IS has been steadily putting on muscle in Afghanistan in the last year, and the attack was said to have originated in Achin district of Nangarhar province — which somewhat begs the question as to why, if the Afghan intelligence services were so sure of the origin did they not move to stave it off. This was the first time that the IS has struck at Kabul. The Taliban were as quick to deny the attack as the IS were to claim it, going so far as to claim that this was an ‘attempt to ignite a civil war’. The Hazara were on the receiving end when the Taliban were in power in Afghanistan and little has changed since they were deposed. A minority group making up around nine per cent of the population, they are the third-largest of the minorities and the most frequently attacked. The dispute over the power line at least on paper does look as if the Hazaras were cut out of the loop. The Afghan government says the re-routing was for reasons of speed and economy. The IS could not care less either way. The Hazara were a soft target, they hit it and we can expect more, a lot more, of the same.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 26th, 2016.
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